Walt Crawford, Partial Bibliography, Part 2 (1995-2014)

Includes only items mentioned in “A Few Words, Part 2.” All articles by Walt Crawford.

123. “Trailing Edge Notes,” Library Hi Tech News 120 (March 1995): 28-32

124, “Trailing Edge Notes,” Library Hi Tech News 121 (April 1995): 28-32

125. “PC Price and Performance: The Values Just Keep Improving.” Library Hi Tech  13:1-2, 123-144.

126. “Trailing Edge Notes,” Library Hi Tech News 122 (May 1995): 28-32

127. “Trailing Edge Notes,” Library Hi Tech News 123 (June 1995): 28-32

128. “Affordable Color Printing: Here At Last.” ONLINE 19:3 (May/June 1995): 23-32.

129. Crawford, Walt, and Michael Gorman. Future Libraries: Dreams, Madness, & Reality. Chicago and London: ALA Editions, 1995. ISBN 0-8389-0647-8 (pbk.)

130. “Those Installation, Demonstration, Possible Defenestration Blues, or, Is Your Demo Disc a Demon?” CD-ROM Professional 8:7 (July): 56-57.

131. “Trailing Edge Notes,” Library Hi Tech News 124 (July/August 1995): 28-32

132. “& In Edition: Moving Toward Extended Libraries: Sensible Futures.” North Carolina Libraries 53:4 (Winter 1995): 162-171.

132. “Numeracy and Common Sense: Real-World Engineering.” Library Hi Tech 13:3, 83-93.

133. “The Cheap and the Read: Low-Priced Software Options and an Update on PC Media.” Library Hi Tech  13:3, 101-120.

134. “Weapons for Road Warriors: Current Trends in Portable Computers.” ONLINE 19:4 (July/August 1995): 101-105.

135. “Trailing Edge Notes,” Library Hi Tech News 125 (September 1995): 28-32

136. “The Big Picture: Choosing Your Next Monitor.” ONLINE 19:5 (September/October 1995): 93-97.

137. “Getting off the Upgrade Treadmill.” CD-ROM Professional 8:9 (September): 86-87.

138. “Trailing Edge Notes,” Library Hi Tech News 126 (October 1995): 28-32

139. “Ten Discs for Thirty Bucks: Multipack Madness and the Method to It.” CD-ROM Professional 8:11 (November): 74-75.

140. “Trailing Edge Notes,” Library Hi Tech News 127 (November 1995): 28-32

141. “Multimedia Madness: Notes Along the Way.” Library Hi Tech  13:4, 101-119.

142. “Bargain-Basement PCs: Sensible Savings?” ONLINE 19:5 (November/ December 1995): 94-101.

143. “Trailing Edge Notes,” Library Hi Tech News 128 (December 1995): 28-32

144. “I Heard It through the Internet.” In Computerization and Controversy: Value Conflicts and Social Choices, Rob King, ed. (San Diego: Academic Press, 1996): 594-596.

145. “CD-ROM Magazines and Mail Order: Are We There Yet?” CD-ROM Professional 9:1 (January): 58-59.

146. “The Sound and the Fury: Adding Sound to Your PC.” ONLINE 20:1 (January/February 1996): 85-89.

146. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1996) (January/February): 44-48

148. “Developing Eureka: Rapid Access to Very Large Databases.” Information Technology and Libraries 15:1 (March 1996): 9-19.

149 “Reader of the Packs: What’s in Those Hanging CD-ROM Strips?” Library Hi Tech 14:1 (1996): 117-128.

150 . “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1996) (March): 28-32

151. “Softkey’s Low-Key Talking Dictionary: It Just Works—What a Concept!” CD-ROM Professional 9:3 (March): 70-71.

152. “Putting It on Paper: Choosing a Printer.” ONLINE 20:2 (March/April 1996): 89-93.

153. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1996) (April): 28-32

154. “Back to Mono: When Multimedia Negates Multichannel.” CD-ROM Professional 9:5 (May): 75-76.

155. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1996) (May): 28-32

156. “Choosing Your ‘Personal Best’ Software and Hardware.” ONLINE 20:3 (May/June 1996): 78-82.

157. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1996) (June): 28-32

158. “Credo: And, Not Or.” ALIA Health Inform 5:2 (1996)

159. “Winners and Keepers: More CD-ROMs that Work.” CD-ROM Professional 9:7 (July): 51-52.

160. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1996) (July/August): 28-32

161. “Tweaking Your Computer: Utility Software.” ONLINE 20:4 (July/August 1996): 72-77.

162. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1996) (September): 28-32

163. “High-Powered Titles from a User’s Perspective: The Boundaries Push Back.” CD-ROM Professional 9:9 (September): 56-57.

164. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1996) (October): 28-32

165. “A Consumer CD-ROM Status Report: They’re Getting Better…but Not All the Time.” CD-ROM Professional 9:11 (November): 59-60.

166. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1996) (November): 28-32

167. “Stowing Your Stuff: Mass Storage Options.” ONLINE 20:6 (November/December 1996): 84-90.

168. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1996) (December): 28-32

188. “Faster, Better, Cheaper: A Decade of PC Progress.” ONLINE 21:1 (January/February 1997): 22-29.

189. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1997) 139 (January/February): 49-54

190. “Introductions and Interpedias.” Database 20:1 (February/March 1997): 76-78.

191. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1997) 140 (March): 19-24

192. “Buying Your Next PC: Comments and Perspectives.” Library Hi Tech 15 (1997) 15:1-2, 151-159.

192. “Choosing Your Weapon: Personal Computing Platforms.” ONLINE 21:4 (July/August 1997): 34-39.

193. “Jargon That Computes: Today’s PC Terminology.” ONLINE 21:2 (March/April 1997): 36-41.

194. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1997) 141 (April): 19-24

195. “Birds, Beers, and Bug-Eyed Monsters!” Database 20:2 (April/May 1997): 85-88.

196. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1997) 142 (May): 19-26

197. “Art and Contemporary History: A Handful of Winners.” Database 20:3 (June/July 1997): 83-87.

198. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1997) 143 (June): 21-28

200. “The World on a Platter: CD-ROM Atlases.” Database 20:4 (August/September 1997): 103-106.

201. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1997) 144 (July/August): 20-27

202. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1997) 145 (September): 17-24

203. “Scandals, Scams, and High-Resolution Displays: A Cautionary Tale.” ONLINE 21:5 (September/October 1997): 76-80.

204. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1997) 146 (October): 17-24

205. “Millennial Librarianship: Coping with Complexity.” Simmons Review 79:2 (Fall 1997): 12-14.

206. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1997) 147 (November): 17-24

207. “Politics, Marketing and Religion: A Mentorom Medley.” Database 20:5 (October/November 1997): 86-89.

208. “Words to Compute By: Keeping Up with Personal Computing Terminology.” Library Hi Tech 15 (1997) 15:3-4, 189-200.

209. “Earthly Forces, Castles, the Human Body, and the Way Things Work: Five from Dorling Kindersley.” Database 20:6 (December 1997): 77-81.

210. “Trailing Edge Notes” in Library Hi Tech News (1997) 148 (December): 16-23

211. “Uncommon Knowledge: Mythbreaking for the Future.” In Finding Common Ground: Creating the Library of the Future Without Diminishing the Library of the Past, ed. Cheryl LaGuardia and Barbara A. Mitchell, (New York: Neal-Schuman, 1998): 16-24.

212. “Paper Persists: Why Physical Library Collections Still Matter.” ONLINE 22:1 (January/February 1998): 42-48.

213. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1998: 149 (January/February): 35-42

214. “The Danger of the Digital Library.” The Electronic Library 16:1 (February 1998): 28-30.

215. “Millennial Librarianship: Maintaining the Mix and Avoiding the Hype.” In Change and Continuity in Librarianship: Approaching the Twenty-first Century; Proceedings of the 40th Military Librarians Workshop. Annapolis, MD: U.S. Naval Academy, 1998.

216. “Reality Check 1997: Personal Computing Approaches the Millennium.” Library Hi Tech 16 (1998) 16:1, 100-112.

217. “Competitors, Complements, and the Best of 1997.” Database 21 (1998) 21:1 (February/March): 83-86.

219. “Little Things Mean a Lot: Worthwhile PC Gadgets.” ONLINE 22:2 (March/April 1998): 45-50.

220. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1998: 150 (March): 21-28

221. “Taking Care of Business.” Database 21 (1998) 21:2 (April/May): 85-88.

222. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1998: 151 (April): 16-23

222. “It’s Just a Tool: Fifteen Years of Personal Computing.” Library Hi Tech 16 (1998) 16:2, 103-112.

223. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1998: 152 (May): 13-20

224. “Codies, Bloatware, and Bibliographic Training.” Database 21 (1998) 21:3 (June/July): 86-89.

225. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1998: 153 (June): 19-26

226. “New Niches for New (and Old) Media.” ONLINE 22:4 (July/August 1998): 36-42.

227. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1998: 154 (July/August): 13-22

228. “The Eyewitness Approach.” Database 21 (1998) 21:4 (August/September): 102-105.

229. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1998: 155 (September): 20-29

230. “A Potpourri of CDs: The Good and the Indifferent.” Database 21 (1998) 21:5 (October/November 1998): 85-88.

231. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1998: 156 (October): 15-24

232. “Finding the Light: What You Need to Know about Optical Media.” ONLINE 22:6 (November/December 1998): 80-83.

233. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1998: 157 (November): 17-26

234. “The Year’s Best and Other Notes.” Database 21 (1998) 21:6 (December/January): 74-79.

235. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1998: 158 (December): 17-26.

236. Being Analog: Creating Tomorrow’s Libraries. Chicago and London: ALA Editions, 1999. ISBN 0-8389-0754-7 (pbk.)

238. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1999: 159 (January/February): 32-41

239. “Learning Resources: Six from ABC-CLIO.” Database 22 (1999) 22:1 (February/March): 89-92.

240. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1999: 160 (March): 18-27

241. “Cheaping Out: When a Bargain Isn’t.” ONLINE 23:1 (March/April): 89-92.

242. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1999: 161 (April): 12-21

243. “The Card Catalog and Other Digital Controversies.” American Libraries 30:1 (January 1999): 52-58.

244. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1999: 162 (May): 14-23

245. “Bits Is Bits: Pitfalls in Digital Reformatting.” American Libraries 30:5 (May 1999): 47-49.

246. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1999: 163 (June): 18-27

247. “Judging Codie Candidates.” Database 22 (1999) 22:3 (June/July): 82-85.

248. “Webcats and Checklists: Some Cautionary Notes.” Information Technology and Libraries 18:2 (June 1999): 100-103.

249. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1999: 164 (July): 18-27

250. “Not Just a Box: Building Better PCs.” Online 23 (1999) 23:4 (July/August): 79-82.

251. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1999: 165 (August): 20-29

252. “No Habla Español: Some Language CD-ROMs.” 22:4 (August/September): 80-84.

253. “Up to Speed on DVD.” American Libraries 30:8 (September 1999): 71-74.

254. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1999: 166 (September/October): 28-37

255. “New Versions from Old Friends.” EContent 22 (1999) 22:5 (October/November): 76-80.

256. “Being Analog.” Media Spectrum 26:3 (Fall 1999): 32, 34

257. “We Call Them Libraries: What the ‘L’ Word Means to Me.” American Libraries 30:10 (November 1999): 38-40.

258. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 1999: 167 (November): 15-24

259. “What Year Is Your Windows?” Online 23 (1999) Online 23:6 (November/December 1999): 95-98.

260. “The Songs and the Story.” EContent 22 (1999) 22:6 (December): 87-91.

262. “Millennial Libraries: Media and Meaning.” In IAMSLIC 99: Recasting the Nets, ed. James W. Markham and Andrea L. Duda (Fort Pierce: IAMSLIC, 2000): 5-10.

263. “From Petroglyphs to CD-ROMs: A Story about Information.” American Libraries 31:1 (January 2000): 72-75.

264. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 17 (2000) 17:1 (January/February): 46-55

265. “Running Light.” EContent 23 (2000) 23:1 (February/March): 79-82.

266. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 17 (2000) 17:2 (March): 18-27

267. “Here’s the Content—Where’s the Context?” American Libraries 31:3 (March 2000): 50-52.

268. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 17 (2000) 17:3 (April): 14-23

269. “New Sounds for the New Millennium?” Online 24 (2000) 24:2 (March/April): 82-84.

270. “Managing Reviewers: A Harvard Case Study.” EContent 23 (2000) 23:2 (April/May): 88-92.

271. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 17 (2000) 17:4 (May): 15-24

273. “The Next Great Library Debate May Be Over Space…” Bookmarks (Southern Oregon University Library) Spring 2000: 2-3.

274. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 17 (2000) 17:5 (June): 16-25

275. “The DVD Advantage: A Mixed Blessing?” EContent 23 (2000) 23:3 (June/July): 89-92.

276. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 17 (2000) 17:6 (July): 16-25

277. “Boringly Good: Today’s Printers.” Online 24 (2000) 24:4 (July/August): 97-100.

278. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 17 (2000) 17:7 (August): 16-25

279. “Too Much to Show, Too Little Space.” EContent 23 (2000) 23:4 (August/September): 87-90.

280. “Guest Editorial: Talking About Public Access—PACS-L’s First Decade.” Information Technology and Libraries 19:3 (September 2000): 112-115.

281. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 17 (2000) 17:8 (September/October): 39-48

282. “Nine Models, One Name: Untangling the E-book Muddle.” American Libraries 31:8 (September 2000): 56-59.

283. “Skies Above, Seas Below.” EContent 23 (2000) 23:5 (October/November): 90-92.

284. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 17 (2000) 17:9 (November): 20-29

285. “DVD Take Two: Cautions and Enthusiasms.” Sights and Sounds 11:11 (November 2000): p. 3.

286. “ILL: Peering into the Future.” Editorial introduction to guest-edited theme section. American Libraries 31:10 (November 2000): p. 35. (Guest-edited section, pp. 36-48.)

287. “The Dogs That Did Not Bark.” Online 24 (2000) 24:6 (November/December): 72-74

288. “Crawford’s Corner” in Library Hi Tech News 17 (2000) 17:10 (December): 21-9.

289. “Leaving the Corner.” EContent 23 (2000) 23:6 (December): 81-4.

290. “Getting the Context.” EContent 24 (2001) 24:1 (February/March): 56-7.

291. “Y2K: Lessons from a Non-Event.” Online 25 (2001) 25:2 (March/April): 73-4.

292. “Tracking the Ebook Niches.” EContent 24 (2001) 24:2 (April): 50-2.

293. “I Will Buy No Content Before It’s Time.” EContent 24 (2001) 24:3 (May): 50-1.

294. “Where Have All the CD-ROMs Gone?” American Libraries 32:5 (May 2001): 66-9.

295. “Ads Around Content: Pushing the Limit.” EContent 24 (2001) 24:4 (June): 48-9.

296. “Exceptional Institutions: Libraries and the Pareto Principle.” American Libraries 32:6 (June/July 2001): 72-4.

297. “Dear AT&T Broadband…” EContent 24 (2001) 24:5 (July): 48-50.

298. “The Portability Problem.” Online 25 (2001) 25:4 (July/August): 75-7.

299. “MP3 Audiobooks: A New Library Medium?” American Libraries 32:7 (August 2001): 64-6.

300. “Tracking the Ebook Vendors.” EContent 24 (2001) 24:6 (August): 50-1.

301. “Announcing Cubed: Media About Media About Media.” EContent 24 (2001) 24:7 (September): 52-3.

302. “The E-Files: ‘You Must Read This’: Library Weblogs.” American Libraries 32:9 (October 2001): 74-6.

303. “User-Generated ‘Content’: This is the Promised Land?” EContent 24 (2001) 24:8 (October): 50-1

304. “The E-Files: Library Lists: Building on E-Mail.” American Libraries 32:10 (November 2001): 56-8.

305. “Sampling the Circle of Gifts.” EContent 24 (2001) 24:9 (November): 48-9

306. “Time to Retire That PC?” Online 25 (2001) 25:6 (November/December): 69-70.

307. “The E-Files: E-newsletters and E-zines: From Current Cites to NewBreed Librarians.” American Libraries 32:11 (December 2001): 51-3.

308. “Choices and Complexity.” EContent 24 (2001) 24:10 (December): 62-3

309. “‘Watch This, It’s Good for You’: Thoughts on Video and Libraries.” In Video Collection Development in Multi-type Libraries: A Handbook, 2nd ed., Gary P. Handman, ed. (Westport: Greenwood Press, 2002), 4-11.

310. “The Magazine Quandary.” EContent 25 (2002) 25:1 (January): 42-3.

311. “Brace Yourselves—It’s the Attack of the PoD People!” American Libraries 33 (2002) 33:1 (January): 93.

312. “Turn on the Radio.” EContent 25 (2002) 25:2 (February): 44-5.

313. “Partnership, Property, and Disintermediation.” American Libraries 33 (2002) 33:2 (February): 59.

314. “Crashing Every Hour.” Online 26 (2002) 26:2 (March/April): 83-4.

315. “Watery Lessons in Partners and Audience.” EContent 25 (2002) 25:3 (March): 42-3.

316. “Who Are You to Doubt a Library Legend?” American Libraries 33 (2002) 33:3 (March): 85.

317. “Give Me a Break!” EContent 25 (2002) 25:4 (April): 42-3.

318. “Free Electronic Refereed Journals: Getting Past the Arc of Enthusiasm.” Learned Publishing 15:2 (April 2002): 117-123.

319. “Talking ‘Bout MyLibrary.” American Libraries 33 (2002) 33:4 (April): 91

320. “Electronic Access to Scientific Articles: Another Perspective.” EContent 25 (2002) 25:5 (May): 42-3.

321. “Thin Is In: Does LCD Finally Replace CRT?” Online 26 (2002) 26:3 (May/June): 82-3.

322. “Slowing Down the Speed-Up: Library Standards.” American Libraries 33 (2002) 33:5 (May): 79.

323. “Adding Value—Looking at Literacy.” EContent 25 (2002) 25:6 (June): 38-9.

324. “What If the Literacy Numbers are Wrong?” American Libraries 33 (2002) 33:6 (June/July): 113.

325. “print*a*bil*i*ty.” EContent 25 (2002) 25:7 (July): 40-1.

326. “OpenURL: Standards Can Be Fun!” American Libraries 33 (2002) 33:7 (August): 99.

327. “Revenge of the Indies: Looking for the Next Netflix.” EContent 25 (2002) 25:8 (August): 44-5.

328. “Kids These Days and the Future of Reading.” American Libraries 33 (2002) 33:8 (September): 73

329. “Copyright Out of Whack, I: Perpetual Protection.” EContent 25 (2002) 25:9 (September): 45-6

330. “The Real CIPA Issues—and a Friendly Challenge.” American Libraries 33 (2002) 33:9 (October): 83.

331. “Copyright Out of Whack II: Control Run Amok.” EContent 25 (2002) 25:10 (October): 42-3

333. “Beware What You Wish For: Online Journal Quandaries.” American Libraries 33 (2002) 33:10 (November): 65.

333. “The White Queen Strikes Again: An Ebook Update.” EContent 25 (2002) 25:11 (November): 46-7.

334. “When Did PCs Get Boring?” Online 26 (2002) 26:6 (November/December): 68-9.

335. “Raspberries, Crippled PCs, and Libraries.” American Libraries 33 (2002) 33:11 (December): 67.

336. “The End of Free Content.” EContent 25 (2002) 25:12 (December): 62-3.

337. First Have Something to Say: Writing for the Library Profession. Chicago: ALA Editions, 2003. ISBN 0-8389-0851-9 (pbk.)

338. “What I Learned in Owensboro.” American Libraries 34 (2003) 34:1 (January): 90.

339. “Contented Readers and Non-Print Magazines.” EContent 26 (2003) 26:1 (January): 48-9.

340. “PoD People Revisited: You Thought I Was Joking?” American Libraries 34 (2003) 34:2 (February): 56.

341. “Building Partnerships: Adding Dialogue to Professional Writing.” EContent 26 (2003) 26:2 (F ebruary): 48-9.

342. “The Century’s Most Vital Technological Device.” American Libraries 34 (2003) 34:3 (March): 84.

343. “Finding the People Behind the Tools.” EContent 26 (2003) 26:3 (March): 50-1.

344. “Personal Computers—They’re Not So Boring?” Online 27 (2003) 27:2 (March/April): 75-6.

345. “Libraries, E-books, and Monolithic Solutions.” American Libraries 34 (2003) 34:4 (April): 88.

346. “The Good, the Slow, and the Flashy: Looking at EContent 100 Sites.” 26:4 (April): 48-9.

347. “Shunned and Attacked—ALA and Free Speech.” American Libraries 34 (2003) 34:5 (May): 70.

348. “Style and Substance: Grading the PC ‘Classic Hundred’.” EContent 26 (2003) 26:5 (May): 48-9.

349. “Just My Type.” EContent 26 (2003) 26:6 (June): 42-3.

350. “Looking Back on Library Technology.” American Libraries 34 (2003) 34:6 (June/July): 100.

351. “Getting to Know You: Personalities Bringing Me Back.” EContent 26 (2003) 26:7 (July): 42-3.

352. “Losing the Legacy of Drives and Ports.” Online 27 (2003) 27:4 (July/August): 59-60.

353. “Time for a Privacy Audit.” American Libraries 34 (2003) 34:7 (August): 91.

354. “Stick Around: Notes on Long-Term Digital Content Retention” EContent 26 (2003) 26:8/9 (August/September): 64-5.

355. “A DVD is Not a Frisbee.” American Libraries 34 (2003) 34:8 (September): 82.

356. “First Have Something to Say.” American Libraries 34 (2003) 34:9 (October): 69.

357. “Making Book.” EContent 26 (2003) 26:10 (October): 42-3.

358. “Thinking About Complex Media.” American Libraries 34 (2003) 34:10 (November): 59.

359. “”Fleeing the Internet: Time to Call It Quits?” EContent 26 (2003) 26:11 (November): 42-3.

360. “Not Fade Away: The Box Survives.” Online 27 (2003) 27:6 (November/December): 59-60.

361. “The Philosophy of Joint-Use Libraries.” American Libraries 34 (2003) 34:11 (December): 83.

362. “Not News: What a Short, Strange Trip It’s Been.” EContent 26 (2003) 26:12 (December): 60-1.

363. “Starting a Bicycle Club: Weblogs Revisited.” American Libraries 35 (2004) 35:1 (January): 90.

364. “Good Enough?” EContent 27 (2004) 27:1/2 (January/February): 42-3.

365. “OpenURL Meets Open Access.” American Libraries 35 (2004) 35:2 (February): 52.

366. “Losing It: A Contrarian’s Thoughts on Digital Content Retention.” EContent 27 (2004) 27:3 (March): 42-3.

367. “On Dragonflies, Teens, and Technology.” American Libraries 35 (2004) 35:3 (March): 78.

368. “Paranoia Strikes Deep: Even Dial-Up Users Need Firewalls.” Online 28 (2004) 28:2 (March/April): 59-60.

369. “Getting the Context Up to Speed” EContent 27 (2004) 27:4 (April): 42-3?

370. “A Dozen Solutions to All Library Problems.” American Libraries 35 (2004) 35:4 (April): 88. Reprinted in The Whole Library Handbook 4, George Eberhart, ed. ALA Editions, 2006, pp. 576-578.

371. “Context Still Matters.” EContent 27 (2004) 27:5 (May): 42-3.

372. “Journals Revisited: A Survivable Future.” American Libraries 35 (2004) 35:5 (May): 56.

373. “Losing What Counts: The Swamping Phenomenon.” EContent 27 (2004) 27:6 (June): 42-3.

374. “What Happened to Technological Fixes?” American Libraries 35 (2004) 35:6 (June/July): 88.

375. “Multifunction Printers: Custom Convergence.” Online 28 (2004) 28:4 (July/August): 59-60.

376. “May I Have Your Attention, Please?” EContent 27 (2004) 27:7/8 (July/August): 42-3.

377. “Meta, Federated, Distributed: Search Solutions.” American Libraries 35 (2004) 35:7 (August): 80.

378. “Keeping the Faith: Playing Fair with Your Visitors.” EContent 27 (2004) 27:9 (September): 42-3.

379. “A Middle Ground on Copyright.” American Libraries 35 (2004) 35:8 (September): 70.

380. “Knowing Your Niche: Thinking About Specialization and Intended Audience.” EContent 27 (2004) 27:10 (October): 42-3

381. “The Dangers of Uniformity.” American Libraries 35 (2004) 35:9 (October): 64.

382. “Survey Says…Or Does It? (Fun with Statistics)” EContent 27 (2004) 27:11 (November): 42-3.

383. “Gadgets and Greatness.” American Libraries 35 (2004) 35:10 (November): 54.

384. “Leave It On or Turn It Off?” Online 28 (2004) 28:6 (November/December): 49-50.

385. “Who Do You Trust?” EContent 27 (2004) 27:12 (December) 60-61.

386. “The Aggravations of Aggregation,” EContent 28 (2005) 28:1/2 (January/February): 43

387. “Contemplation and Content: Getting Under Their Skins,” EContent 28 (2005) 28:3 389. (March): 43

388. “Little Things Mean a Lot,” Online 29 (2005) 29:2 (March/April): 54-56.

389.“Whose Rights Does DRM Manage?” EContent 28 (2005) 28:4 (April): 42

390. Policy and Library Technology. Library Technology Reports 41:2 (March/April 2005). Chicago: ALA TechSource.

391. “OpenURL Basics” in Technology for the Rest of Us (ed. Nancy Courtney), Westport, CT: Libraries Unlimited, 2005, pp. 31-42.

392. “The Coming of the Borgs,” EContent 28 (2005) 28:5 (May): 43

393. “Open Access and Survivable Libraries,” EContent 28 (2005) 28:6 (June): 42

394. “Firefox and Future Dangers: The Open and Closed of It,” Online 29 (2005) 29:4 (July/August): 45-47

395. “This is Going on Your Permanent Record,” EContent 28 (2005) 28:7/8 (July/August): 42

396. “Metacontent: Say What You (Don’t) Mean,” EContent 28 (2005) 28:9 (September): 42

397. “Econtent and Academic Libraries,” EContent 28 (2005) 28:10 (October): 42

398. “Google: A Company, Not a Religion,” EContent 28 (2005) 28:11 (November): 42

399. “P is for Personal, C is for Computer,” Online 29 (2005) 29/6 (November/December): 58-60.

400. “Potholes on the Infobahn,” EContent 28 (2005) 28:12 (December): 62

401.“Building the Econtent Commons,” EContent 29 (2006) 29:2 (March): 44

402. “What’s Wrong With Your PC?” Online 30 (2006) 30:2 (March/April): 55-57

403. “Rich Media is Hard,” EContent 29 (2006) 29:4 (May): 44

404. “What’s Wrong With Your PC, Part 2,” Online 30 (2006) 30:3 (May/June): 55-57.

405. “Libraries and Google/Google Book Search: No Competition!” Google Librarian Newsletter June 2006.

406. “Tracking the eBook Players Today,” EContent 29 (2006) 29:6 (July/August): 43

407. “Standards and ‘Standards’—Where Would Your PC Be Without Them?” Online 30 (2006) 30:4 (July/August): 51-53.

408. “Why Aren’t Ebooks More Successful?” EContent 29 (2006) 29:8 (October): 44

409. “Personal Computers and Media: Musing on PC Magazine,” Online 30 (2006) 30:6 (November/December): 58-60.

410. “Shortcut Literacy,” EContent 29 (2006) 29:10 (December): 58.

411. “The Renascence of the Writer,” EContent 30 (2007) 30:2 (March): 44.

412. “Ghosts in the Social Networking Machines,” EContent 30 (2007) 30:4 (May): 37.

413. “Security, Naïveté, and the Limits of Pseudonymity,” EContent 30 (2007) 30:6 (July/August): 60

414. “Long Live the Audience!” EContent 30 (2007) 30:8 (October): 23

415. “Will You Be My Friend?” EContent 30 (2007) 30:10 (December): 60.

416. “Books and the Quarter-Empty Glass,” ONLINE 32 (2008) 32:1 (January/February): 58-60

417. “The 24x7 Ubiquitous Connectivity Blues,” EContent 31 (2008) 31:2 (March): 23.

418. “Observers, Advocates and Authority,” ONLINE 32 (2008) 32:2 (March/April): 58-60.

419. “Ethics Online,” EContent 31 (2008) 31:4 (May): 39.

420. “Publishing It Yourself: Experiences with Pod,” ONLINE 32 (2008) 32:3 (May/June): 58-60.

421. “Open Access: It’s Never Simple,” ONLINE 32 (2008) 32:4 (July/August): 58-60.

422. “Civilizing the Wild, Wild Web,” EContent 31 (2008) 31:6 (July/August): 43

423. “Twitter Ate My Column,” ONLINE 32 (2008) 32:5 (September/October): 58-60

424. “The Tragedy of Andersonomics,” EContent 31 (2008) 31:8 (October): 44

425. “Thinking about Library Literature,” ONLINE 32 (2008) 32:6 (November/December): 58-60.

426. “Welcome to the Neighborhood,” EContent 31 (2008) 31:10 (December): 62

427. “The Celestial Jukebox and Physical Media,” ONLINE 33 (2009) 33:1 (January/February): 58-60

428. “Futurism and Libraries,” ONLINE 33 (2009) 33:2 (March/April): 58-60

429. “Can You Read Me?” EContent 32 (2009) 32:2 (March): 43

430. “Writing for Obscurity,” ONLINE 33 (2009) 33:3 (May/June): 58-60

431. “A Time of Limits,” ONLINE 33 (2009) 33:4 (July/August): 58-60

432. “The Top 10 Reasons You See So Many Lists,” EContent 32 (2009) 32:6 (July/August)

433. “PermaCopyright: A Modest Proposal,” ONLINE 33 (2009) 33:5 (September/October): 58-60

434. “Authenticity and Sincerity,” EContent 32 (2009) 32:8 (October)

435. “Agreeable Disagreement and the Excluded Middle,” ONLINE 33 (2009) 33:6 (November/December): 58-60.

436. “Is Dead Isn’t Dead—But Maybe It Should Be,” EContent 32 (2009) 32:10 (December)

437. “One, Two, Some, Many: Search Results & Meaning,” ONLINE 34 (2010) 34:1 (January/February): 58-60

438. “Being Wrong and Learning From ‘Partial Success’,” ONLINE 34 (2010) 34:3 (May/June): 57-59

438. “But Still They Blog,” ONLINE 34 (2010) 34:2 (March/April): 58-60

440. “The Uniqueness of Everyday Language,” ONLINE 34 (2010) 34:4 (July/August): 58-60

441. “Conference Survival in a Time of Limits,” ONLINE 34 (2010) 34:5 (September/October): 58-60

442. “TechNos and TechMusts,” ONLINE 34 (2010) 34:6 (November/December): 58-60.

443. Open Access: What You Need to Know Now. Chicago: ALA Editions, 2011. ISBN 978-0-8389-1106-8 (pbk.)

444. “Are You Reading This?” ONLINE 35 (2011) 35:1 (January-February): 58-60

445, “Library 2.0 Five Years Later,” ONLINE 35 (2011) 35:2 (March-April): 58-60

446. “Should You Care About POD?” ONLINE 35 (2011) 35:3 (May-June): 58-60

447. “Public Library Blogs,” ONLINE 35 (2011) 35:4 (July-August): 58-60

448. “Open Access: What You Need to Know Now,” ONLINE 35 (2011) 35:5 (September-October): 58-60

449. “Privatization, Google Books, and the Abuse of Language,” ONLINE 35 (2011) 35:6 (November-December): 58-60.

450. The Librarian’s Guide to Micropublishing: Helping Patrons and Communities Use Free and Low-Cost Publishing Tools to Tell Their Stories. Medford, NJ: Information Today, Inc., 2012. ISBN 978-1-57387-430-4 (pbk.), 978-1-57387-451-9 (casewrap)

451. “Micropublishing: Helping Your Community Tell Its Stories,” ONLINE 36:1 (2012), 39-42.

452. “Introduction,” in Using Social Media in Libraries: Best Practices (Lanham: Scarecrow Press) 2013, pp. ix-xii.

453. “Self-Publish or Traditional? My Experience with Books for Librarians,” Against the Grain 25:3 (June 2013), pp. 16,18.

454. “Makerspaces for the Mind,” Foreword for Library Publishing Toolkit (Geneseo: IDS Project Press) 2013, pp. ix-xi.

455. Big-Deal Serial Purchasing: Tracking the Damage. Library Technology Reports 50:4 (May/June 2014). Chicago: ALA TechSource.

456. Successful Social Networking in Public Libraries. Chicago: ALA Editions, 2014. ISBN 978-0-8389-1167-9 (pbk.)